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1. The Secret Agent at South Street

Get Wokingham, Thursday 23 October 2008
This adaptation of Conrad's novel has just about everything needed to make a truly gripping show.

2. Danny Bhoy, at South Street

Get Wokingham, Wednesday 8 October 2008
This young, personable Scot made much of the fact that he had been booked – as the first act during this year’s Reading Comedy Festival – for two shows by an overly optimistic programmer.

3. Progress Theatre - Honour

Get Wokingham, Wednesday 1 October 2008
Lorraine Forrest-Turner plays the title role (Honor) in this play of mid-life crises with commendable passion, despair and disbelief.

4. Alice and the White Rabbit

Get Wokingham, Tuesday 23 September 2008

Indigo Moon Theatre brought this show of shadow puppets – for anyone over four years old – to South Street with a magical flurry.

5. Titanic The Musical

Get Wokingham, Thursday 5 June 2008

Initially this may seem an odd topic for musical theatre to attempt, but in fact it fits neatly into the series of works Stephen Sondheim created.

6. Beauty and The Beast on Ice

Get Wokingham, Thursday 15 May 2008

There is no denying the spectacle is spectacular, the dancers are superb and the whole thing is a delight and a pleasure for anyone who’s ever sat watching a ballet and thought to themselves, ‘Well, this is very nice, but couldn’t it be faster and smoother and funnier?’

7. The Naked Truth, The Hexagon, 29/4/08

Get Wokingham, Friday 2 May 2008

The main problem with this play is its continual feeling of unsurprise and its lack of originality.

8. George And The Dragon, South Street, Sunday 27/4/08.

Get Wokingham, Tuesday 29 April 2008

Garlic Theatre have won numerous awards for their puppetry shows and it’s quite obvious why.

9. Review: Kiss Me, Kate

Get Wokingham, Wednesday 23 April 2008

If there’s one thing Cole Porter could be trusted to do, that was to write great tune after great tune and, from the very outset, Kiss Me, Kate is filled with them.

10. Four Nights In Knaresborough, 15/4/08

Get Wokingham, Wednesday 16 April 2008

This is the second ‘what happened next’ play in a row that the Progress have put on. First came After Juliet, imagining Verona in the aftermath of Shakespeare’s big romantic tragedy, and now this play, dealing with a year stuck in a castle in rainy Yorkshire following the assassination of Thomas à Becket.

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